The object of this action, briefly stated, was to re« strain the Board of Bail way and Warehouse Commissioners from building a State Elevator at Duluth pursuant to the provisions of Laws 1893, ch. 30.
The plaintiff assails the constitutionality of this act on several grounds; but the only one we find necessary to consider is that it is in violation of the Constitution, Art. 9, § 5, of this State, which provides that “the state shall never contract any debts for works of internal improvement or be a party in carrying on such works.”
On the other hand, the contentions of the defendant are:
First. That the works contemplated by the act are merely ancillary
Second. That the elevator and other works provided for in the act are not “works of internal improvement,” within the meaning of the Constitution; that this term refers only to channels of travel and commerce, such as roads, bridges* railways, canals, livers, and the like. We shall consider these two propositions in the order named.
The right of the state, in the exercise of its police power, to regulate the business of receiving, weighing, inspecting, and storing grain for others, in elevators or warehouses, as being a business affected with a public interest, is now settled beyond all controversy. This power extends even to fixing the charges for such services. Munn v. Illinois, 94 U. 8. 113; Budd v. New York, 143 U. S. 517, (12 Sup. Ct. 468.)
And where a business is a proper subject of police regulation, doubtless, the legislature may, in the exercise of that power, adopt any measures they see fit, provided only they adopt such as have some relation to, and have some tendency to accomplish, the desired end; and if the measures adopted have such relation or tendency the courts will never assume to determine whether they are wise, or the best that might have been adopted. State v. Donaldson, 41 Minn. 74, (42 N. W. 781.)
How the “grain elevator” business may be and has been regulated is illustrated by the statutes of this state enacted for that purpose, notably Laws 1885, ch. 144, and Laws 1893, ch. 28. The first of these statutes declares all elevators or warehouses at certain terminal points, in which grain is stored in bulk, public warehouses. Requires the proprietor or manager to obtain a license and give a bond; to receive for storage all grain in suitable condition when tendered. Prohibits him from mixing grain of different grades. Requires him to keep grain in separate bins when requested by the owner. Provides what kind and form of receipt he shall give for the grain. Prohibits him from inserting anything in the receipt limiting his liability as imposed by the laws of the state. Requires him to make statements under oath of the condition of his business whenever required by the Board of Railway and Warehouse Commissioners; also, to
The elevator is to be under the management of the Board of Railway and Warehouse Commissioners, who are to appoint a suitable person as warehouseman “of said state elevator or warehouse,” and such assistants as are necessary, and adopt such rules and regulations for the receiving, handling, storing, and delivering grain as they shall deem proper, with power, in case they think that any person or combination of persons is seeking “to monopolize said elevator,” to adopt rules limiting the amount of grain which any one person, combination, or corporation may have in the elevator at any one time. They are also required to fix the charges for storing, inspecting, weighing, and handling grain, including the cost of receiving and delivering, which charges are to be a lien on the grain so received, and, when collected, to be paid into the state treasury to the credit of the grain and warehouse fund.
The elevator is to be “cleaned and measured up” once each year, to ascertain whether there is any gain or loss by the system of dockage.
In connection with their other duties in managing and operating this elevator, the Commissioners are to keep on file, for public inspection, publications showing the market price of grain and farm products in certain specified leading markets of this country and Europe; also, the freight rates to such markets by the different means of transportation; also, to publish a weekly bulletin showing the prices paid in said markets for .farm products, and the rates of freight between Duluth and Minneapolis and said markets, said bulletin to be kept on file “in said institution,” and in the office of the Commissioners in St. Paul, and also to be furnished by mail to all persons who may order the same, at a price to be fixed by the Commissioners, not exceeding one dollar per annum.
The Commissioners are also to send samples of grain, being exported, to the various leading markets of the world, “for inspection
It seems to us as plain as words can make it — too plain to admit of argument — that the provisions of this act have no relation or reference whatever to the exercise of the police power to regulate the “grain elevator” business. We cannot discover, and counsel have failed to point out, a single provision of the act that has any relation to, or any tendency to accomplish, any such purpose. Aside from the provisions of sections 3 and 4, for what we may term a bureau of information as to the state of the markets and rates of transportation, (which has no relation to the exercise of any police power, and the connection between which and an elevator of a capacity of 1,500,000 bushels, with “all necessary spur tracks, terminal yards and other facilities to receive and ship grain,” is not apparent,) the evident sole purpose of the act is to provide for the state erecting an elevator, and itself going into the “grain elevator” business. All the provisions of the act as to receiving, handling, storing, and delivering grain clearly have reference only to the management of the business conducted by the state in its own elevator. The keynote to the object of the law is, we apprehend, to be found in the last clause of section 4 above quoted as to the intention of the act; and so far as relates to the right of the state, under the police power, to regulate this business, the position of defendants’ counsel really amounts to this: That whenever those who are engaged in any business which is affected with a public interest, and hence the subject of governmental regulation, do not furnish the public proper and reasonable service, the state may, as a means of regulating the business, itself engage in it, and furnish the public better service at reasonable rates, or, by means of such state competition, compel others to do so.
The very statement of the proposition is sufficient to show to what startling results it necessarily leads. It needs no argument to
Railways are also, under this same police power, the subjects of state regulation; and if it should be deemed that they were not furnishing the public with proper service, or charging unreasonable rates, it could with equal propriety be claimed that it would be a proper means of exercising the police power of regulating the business for the state itself to construct and operate competing railways. The hack business, the pawnbrokers’ business, the manufacture and sale of intoxicating liquors, and numerous other kinds of business that might be named, are also the subjects of state regulation; and, if counsel’s contention is correct, we do not see why, as a means of “regulating” these kinds of business, the state itself might not engage in running hacks, pawnbrokers’ shops, building and operating distilleries and breweries, or even running saloons. But further illustration cannot be necessary. The police power of the state to regulate a business does not include the power to engage in carrying it on. Police regulation is to be affected by restraints upon a business, and the adoption of rules and regulations as to the manner in which it shall be conducted.
While the jurists of continental Europe sometimes include under the term “police power” all governmental institutions which are established with public funds for the promotion of the public good, yet, as understood in American constitutional law, the term means simply the power of the state to impose those restraints upon private rights which are necessary for the general welfare of all, and is but the power to enforce the maxim, “Sic utere tuo ut alienum non laeclas.”
The provisions of this act have no reference to the regulation, in any such sense, of the “grain elevator business,” and the right of the state to embark in the construction and operation of these works cannot be predicated on the police power.
2. Irrespective of the police po wer, we may concede, without deciding, that the legislature has unlimited power to embark, at the expense and in behalf of the state, in any business or other enterprise
As already stated, defendants’ contention is that the prohibition of the Constitution must be restricted to channels of travel and commerce. There is certainly nothing in the etymology of the words that would thus limit their meaning. "Internal” means merely interior, or within any limit; and “improvement” means progress towards what is better, or melioration. But, of course, etymological definitions of words are not controlling, if a phrase has, by common usage and understanding, received a fixed and definite meaning. And, in support of his contention counsel appeals to what he claims has become the fixed historical meaning of “internal improvements” in the political dialect of this country. The history of the term, as well as of the causes which led to the adoption of provisions in the constitutions of many states prohibiting the state from engaging in Works of internal improvement, has been gone into very exhaustively by counsel in their brief. It is unquestionably true that in the earlier history of this country the works of “internal improvement” or “public improvements” (the terms seem to have been used interchangeably, as synonymous) in which the government, federal or state, embarked, wrnre channels of travel and commerce, such as the construction of turnpikes and canals, and the improvement of rivers and harbors. There were two reasons for this: First, in the then undeveloped condition of our country, highways for travel and commerce were the great and urgent need of the people; second, in those days the tendency was, much more than now, to limit the functions of government to those things which were necessary to secure the enjoyment of life, liberty, and property. Channels of travel and commerce were of such public importance as to be deemed by many to come within that category; but beyond that it was not supposed that it was proper or competent for the state to embark in any public improvements, except such as strictly pertained to its proper governmental functions. Hence, in the controversy between the two great national parties during the last thirty years of the first half of the present century, the phrase “internal improvements” was generally, if not always, used with reference to the building of turn-
The same was true of the state governments. The construction of roads, canals, and the like, were the only works of internal or public improvement, outside those required in the performance of strictly governmental functions, in which they engaged.
But, suffering as the people were for want of channels of travel and commerce, which seemed the great desideratum for the development of the country, many of the states, for a time, expended large, sums of money, and incurred immense debts, in the construction of roads and canals, some of which were of much value, and others ■of very little value, the cost and management of which, in many cases, resulted in financial disaster, bankruptcy, and even state repudiation. This was notably true in the great financial crash of 1836-37.
Experience demonstrated that such enterprises could not be Economically constructed or profitably and prudently administered by the government; and hence many of the states not only made provision for disposing of their works of public improvement, but, in view of their bitter experience, inserted in their constitutions provisions prohibiting the state from,ever again engaging in such undertakings. The purpose, clearly, was to remand all such works to private enterprise, and to protect the citizen from being taxed for them. These provisions were incorporated by the people in their constitutions as precautions against injudicious action by their legislatures or even themselves, if, in a time of inflation or popular excitement, they should be tempted to embark in public improvements in cases where they were not content to wait the result of private enterprise. This state had an experience of this kind at an early day, in the adoption of the $5,000,000 loan bill, in the form of a constitutional amendment. The result of that experiment is a matter of familiar history.
In the case of the states, as in the case of the federal government, it is no doubt true that what was prominently in mind in using the term “works of internal improvement,” or “public improvement,” were roads, canals, rivers, and other avenues of commerce, and that
But it is equally true that no case can be found in which it has been held that works of internal improvement mean only channels or mediums of travel and commerce. Indeed, even if the term was to be given the restricted meaning contended for, it is not apparent why it would not still include the works contemplated by this act; for an elevator on the navigable waters of a great lake, with terminal connections with all the railways centering at that point, and equipped with “all necessary spur tracks, terminal yards and other facilities to receive and ship grain,” is merely ancillary to the transportation of the property. In fact, the receipt and storage of the grain into, and its delivery out of, such an elevator, is but a part of its transportation.
But we reject any such narrow definition of the term “works of internal improvement,” and we are not without authority for our position.
An act of the legislature of Nebraska authorized the issue of bonds by any county to aid in the construction of any railroad or other work of internal improvement.
There was some ground, here, to hold, upon the application of the doctrine of ejusdem generis, that the act applied only to works similar in kind to railroads. But in Traver v. Merrick Co., 14 Neb. 327, (15 N. W. 690,) it was held that a water grist mill erected for public use, the rates of toll to be regulated by the county commissioners, and being subject to regulation by the legislature, was a work of internal improvement, within the meaning of the act; the court saying that the test for determining the character of an improvement of this kind is the use for which it is designed. If it is for public use, subject to legislative control and regulation, it would seem to come within the meaning of the words “internal improvement.”
In Blair v. Cuming Co., 111 U. S. 363, (4 Sup. Ct. 449,) the Supreme
A statute of Kansas authorized towns and counties to issue bonds “for the purpose of building bridges or to aid in the construction of railroads, water powers or other works of internal improvement.” Kan. Laws 1872, ch. 68, § 1. Another statute declared all custom gristmills to be public mills, and regulated their management.
In Township of Burlington v. Beasley, 94 U. S. 310, it was held that bonds issued to aid in the construction of a steam custom mill were authorized by the statute, — in other words, that a steam custom mill was a work of internal improvement, — -the court saying that the expression is usually applied to railroads and canals, but to confine it to those two subjects would be to give the statute a narrow construction; also, that railroads, turnpikes, buildings, bridges, ferries, reclaiming swamps, and the like, are no doubt, improvements, and, if such improvements are within the limits of a town or county, they are internal to such town or county. In this case, as in others, the terms, “works of internal improvement,” “public improvements,” and “public works,” seem to be used as synonymous.
In Sparrow v. Commissioner State L. O., 56 Mich. 567, (23 N. W. 315,) the court, speaking through Justice Campbell, commenting on a provision in the constitution of that state the same as in our own, says: “The phrase is as broad as language can make it. It can make no difference for what direct or indirect purpose of public utility an improvement is made, so long as it comes within such a definition. All works of convenience, whether for travel, drainage, or irrigation, are similar in their nature. Any such wrork that is deemed important enough for the state to construct is within the rule, and, if not built in the permitted way, [by devoting thereto the avails of any grant to the state for that specific purpose,] is within the prohibition.”
In Leavenworth Co. v. Miller, 7 Kan. 493, in commenting on a similar provision in the constitution of that state, the court saj^s: “The state, as a state, is absolutely prohibited from engaging in any
The far-reaching consequences of restricting this constitutional inhibition to highways for travel and commerce can readily be foreseen. It would leave the state, through its legislature, at liberty, in every period of inflation or excitement, to embark in any and every other sort of enterprise, outside of its legitimate governmental functions, which might be deemed of public benefit. It would admit, not only of building grain elevators, but also of engaging in schemes of drainage, irrigation, developing water powers, building public gristmills, public creameries and cheese factories, establishing stock yards and packing houses, and other like enterprises, almost without limit. Certainly, to engage in such enterprises as these at the expense of the taxpayers of the state is quite as much within the mischiefs aimed at by the constitution as to
The time was when the policy was to confine the functions of government to the limits strictly necessary to secure the enjoyment of life, liberty, and property. The old Jeffersonian maxim was that the country is governed the best that is governed the least. At present, the tendency is all the other way, and towards socialism and paternalism in government. This tendency is, perhaps, to some extent, natural, as well as inevitable, as population becomes more dense, and society older, and more complex in its relations. The wisdom of such a policy is not for the courts. The people are supreme, and, if they wish to adopt such a change in the theory of government, it is their right to do so. But in order to do it they must amend the constitution of the state. The present constitution was not framed on any such lines.
It is always a delicate as well as an ungracious task to declare invalid an act of a co-ordinate branch of the government, and should never be done, except in cases free from reasonable doubt. But the legislature is not the people, any more than are the executive and judiciary. Like them, it is a branch — doubtless the most important one — of the government, and, equally with them, subject to the limitations imposed by the constitution; and, whenever it has clearly transcended those limitations, it is the duty of the judiciary to so declare. The act now under consideration seems to us so clearly in violation of the constitution that it is our bounden duty to so hold.
Order reversed.
(Opinion published 57 N. W. B.ep. 331.)